Gold Price History · Interwar Chaos

1929

The Crash

Wall Street collapsed and the Great Depression began — the deflationary spiral that would soon force gold itself out of American hands.

Average price
$21/oz
In 2025 dollars
$388/oz
Change on the year
+0.0%
After inflation
+0.0%

1929 in context · real value, 1909–1949

1910192019301940 $388
Inflation-adjusted to 2025 dollars. See all 768 years →

The Wall Street Crash of October 1929 ended the Roaring Twenties and began the Great Depression. Gold remained pinned at $20.67, but the deflation and banking collapse that followed would prove catastrophic for the existing monetary order.

As the Depression deepened and citizens hoarded gold against failing banks, pressure built that would culminate in Roosevelt's 1933 confiscation and the 1934 revaluation to $35. In a fixed-price world, 1929 is a reminder that gold's importance is not always in its price — sometimes it is in what governments do *to* it when the system breaks.

Key events of 1929

  1. 1929-10-29

    Black Tuesday

    The stock market crashes; the Great Depression begins, setting the stage for the 1933 gold confiscation.

What would $10,000 of gold in 1929 be worth today?

Run the numbers across gold, stocks, housing, and bonds — adjusted for inflation.

Calculate 1929 →

How gold did in 1929

Value at year-end of $10,000 invested on 1 January 1929.

Gold
$10,000 +0.0%
S&P 500 (total return)
$9,170 −8.3%
US housing
$9,803 −2.0%
Inflation (CPI)
$10,000 +0.0%

Annual-average basis. Gold: Officer & Williamson; S&P 500 & Treasuries: Damodaran (NYU); housing: Shiller; CPI: BLS. Methodology →

Related years

Sources. Gold price: Officer & Williamson, The Price of Gold, 1257–Present (annual average); inflation adjustment by US CPI (BLS / Officer & Williamson). Asset comparison from the calculator dataset. Figures are annual averages. Full methodology →